Park Rangers Find Missing Man in Great Smoky Mountains National Park

Park Rangers Find Missing Man in Great Smoky Mountains National Park

Gatlinburg, TN (WOKI) Rangers in the Great Smoky Mountains National Park announce they have found a man who went missing last week near the Chimney Tops Overlook area of the park.

Sixty-two year old Timothy Cook was last seen near the Chimney Tops overlook area on Sunday, May 12; his vehicle was found unoccupied in the Chimney Tops parking lot on Tuesday, May 14.

Park officials say Cook was found safe Friday morning within the Great Smoky Mountains National Park.

ORIGINAL STORY: Rangers in the Great Smoky Mountains National Park are asking for help finding a missing man.

Park officials say 62-year-old Timothy Cook was last seen near the Chimney Tops overlook on Sunday, May 12, and his vehicle was found unoccupied in the Chimney Tops overlook parking area on May 14.

Officials describe Cook as a white male with black hair, a white beard and brown eyes. He is 5’10” tall and weighs 190 pounds.

Anyone who saw Cook or has information on his whereabouts is asked to please contact the park service:

  • CALL the NPS Tip Line 888-653-0009
  • ONLINE go.nps.gov/SubmitATip 
  • EMAIL [email protected]
  • EMERGENCY dial 9-1-1 
Tennessee Promise Application Deadline Extended Due to Ongoing FAFSA Issues

Tennessee Promise Application Deadline Extended Due to Ongoing FAFSA Issues

The Tennessee Higher Education Commission says the deadline for the Tennessee Promise scholarship program has been extended due to ongoing issues with the Free Application for Federal Student Aid, or FAFSA.

The new deadline is now May 31st which provides high school seniors and their families additional time to complete their FAFSA and remain eligible for the state’s tuition-free higher education program.

The decision comes after students and families have experienced ongoing issues applying for college due to the federal implementation of the new FAFSA.

Anyone who encounters issues or has issues while completing the FAFSA can do one of the following to get assistance:

  • Reach out to your college advisor or high school counselor
  • Call the THEC/TSAC FAFSA Hotline at 1-800-342-1663
  • Email [email protected]
  • Contact the Ayers Foundation Trust or tnAchieves
Knoxville Fire Department Asking for Information after Dollar General Fire

Knoxville Fire Department Asking for Information after Dollar General Fire

Knoville, TN (WOKI) The Knoxville Fire Department is asking the public for information following a fire at a Dollar General in West Knoxville.

The fire happened Tuesday afternoon at the store on Executive Park Drive, and fire officials say the blaze caused serious damage to the building.

The cause of the fire is still under investigation, and the department is hoping people in or around the store saw something that might help fire investigators determine the cause of the fire.

“We are reaching out to the community for their cooperation and support in this matter,” said Mark Wilbanks, Assistant Chief of Knoxville Fire Department. “Our priority is to ascertain the cause of the fire. Any information provided by members of the public will be treated with the utmost confidentiality and used solely for investigative purposes.”

Those with information are asked to call KFD at 865-637-1386.

Group Hired by City of Knoxville Recommends Limiting Parking and Increased Rates and Fines

Group Hired by City of Knoxville Recommends Limiting Parking and Increased Rates and Fines

The City of Knoxville releases its report from a group hired to evaluate downtown parking who recommends, among other things, limiting free parking and increasing pricing.

They recommend beginning free parking at 10 p.m. and charging for parking on weekends and increasing the cost of street parking. Also, parking lots underneath I-40 and James White Parkway, owned by TDOT, are free but the group suggests charging in those lots as well.

Currently, most city-owned downtown parking garages offer free parking after 6 p.m. on weekdays and all day on weekends. Walker recommended changing that, instead beginning free parking at 10 p.m. Walker also suggested charging for parking on weekends, both Saturday and Sunday. This would apply to every garage except the Langley Garage, which has free parking built-in to its deed.

The recommendations come just a day after the Downtown Merchants Group released their own results from a public survey which showed most people want free parking.

The group also suggested raising charges for parking citations by at least 90%.

Walker also suggested raising the price of parking in “high demand” areas of parking, especially for street spots. In raising the price of street parking, however, Walker also suggested removing time limits for street spots, keeping the spaces in use. This, the group claimed, would encourage people to park in garages or in cheaper “low demand” areas and walk to their destination. As for garages, Walker was relatively satisfied with Knoxville’s current pricing, only recommending that the city raise Market Square Garage’s rates.

Parking in the wrong spot would also cost more under Walker’s suggestions. The group suggested raising charges for parking citations. As of now, tickets can cost downtown parkers anywhere from $11 to $50, depending on the infraction. Walker suggested raising those fines to $21 to $200.

In the same vein as moving people from street spaces to garage spaces, Walker also suggested investing in more pedestrian-friendly spaces on popular downtown streets, like Gay Street. Walker appeared pleased with the city’s experiments closing Gay Street to cars and making it a pedestrian-only area temporarily.

The group also suggested the city allow businesses, like restaurants, to rent out spaces for more real estate, like outdoor seating. Other suggestions included restructuring how the city organizes parking responsibilities on the administrative level, improving parking branding and implementing more modern infrastructure, like investing in mobile payment systems.

At this point, city representatives said there are no concrete plans to implement any of the changes the group suggested.

State of the Art Pitcher’s Mound for New Multi-Use Stadium in Downtown Knoxville

State of the Art Pitcher’s Mound for New Multi-Use Stadium in Downtown Knoxville

A retractable pitcher’s mound is part of the new multi-use stadium in downtown Knoxville.

The stadium will be home to both the Smokies baseball team and One Knoxville SC Soccer.

Esto Retractable has been contracted to place a state-of-the-art retractable pitcher’s mound in the stadium. The mound will be able to lower itself, turning what would be a lengthy, intensive project into a two-hour transformation.

The company is relatively new, forming in Indiana in July of 2017. It boasts a patented system that brings the mound below ground-level so groundskeepers can place an even turf over the top. The company claims on its website that the process is so quick, venues can host baseball in the morning and soccer in the evening.

This state-of-the-art retractable mound will transform the field from a baseball diamond to soccer pitch. As for construction, builders are hoping to get the mound installed next month.

Eleven People, Including Students, Arrested on UT’s Campus Following Nakba Day Vigil
Photo courtesy of WVLT

Eleven People, Including Students, Arrested on UT’s Campus Following Nakba Day Vigil

Eleven people, including three students and the owner of Yassin’s Falafel House, are arrested during a Vigil at the University of Tennessee.

UT Police say last (Wednesday) night’s arrests happened on the Law School lawn. The vigil was meant to honor communities displaced in Palestine back in 1948 to create Israel.

Several police cars and an ambulance were sent to the area at 9 p.m. after attendees ignored warnings about consequences for violating time restrictions and stayed on campus too long which resulted in the arrests.

Below is the full statement the university sent to WVLT News:

The university has repeatedly communicated about following policies, including regarding the time, place and manner for holding events, to the protest group leaders and provided signage at their reserved event space. Administrators and UTPD provided personal warnings today that violation would result in trespass citation and arrest.

Despite these clear and repeated warnings, several members chose not to vacate the area and were arrested for trespassing. Eleven group members were taken into custody, including three students and eight people not affiliated with the university. Any student arrested will also be referred to student conduct.

The University of Tennessee respects individual’s rights to free speech and free expression and is committed to managing the campus for all. We will continue to be guided by the law and university policy, neutral of viewpoint. Spokesperson for the University of Tennessee

This all comes after protests started on UT’s campus on May 1, to protest the war between Israel and Hamas in Palestine.

On May 2, nine people were charged after the group refused to disband.

Following the arrests, UT Chancellor Donde Plowman released a statement that the university respects individual’s rights to free speech and free expression and is committed to the safety of all members of our campus community.”

Students that were protesting on May 5, including Hasan Atatrah, had a list of demands that call for the university and the United States to stop supporting the war or companies who manufacture weapons used in the fighting.

“We’re calling on our government and our university to divest from weapons manufacturers that are involved in human rights violations. Calling on them to disclose a lot of those investments that they have and calling on them to protect students and peoples rights to free speech,” said Atatrah. Story courtesy of WVLT

Two Clinton High School Teachers are Fired after Changing over a Thousand Grades
Photo courtesy of WVLT

Two Clinton High School Teachers are Fired after Changing over a Thousand Grades

Two Clinton High School teachers are fired after changing nearly 1,500 student grades.

On Monday, the Board of Education met for a special meeting in which they discussed and vote on a “Charges of Dismissal” for Rachel Jones and Clay Turpin for unprofessional conduct, insubordination and neglect of duty. The board voted to fire both teachers.

This all comes after an investigation was launched into possible grade manipulation and now-former Principal Dan Jenkins resigned.

Previous Coverage: Anderson County Schools investigating teacher and principal for grade manipulation at Clinton High School

According to the “Charges of Dismissal” document, both Jones and Turpin reported to Jenkins, who was recognized as Tennessee’s Principal of the Year in 2023.

The State of Tennessee previously recognized Clinton High School as a “Reward School” for the 2022-23 school year, but the report says, “As the 2023-2024 school year progressed, however, it became more and more clear to [Dr. Tim Parrott] as the Director of Schools, and to other central office administrators, that something was amiss at CHS.”

Administrators and Parrott then began investigating students’ access to and performance within credit recovery and/or virtual programming and submitted the issues to the state Department of Education.

When school administration met with Jenkins and Jones to suspend them while the investigation progressed, the report says Jones accepted her suspension and “even expressed remorse for what she knew was improper conduct.” Jenkins, however, resigned from the district.

During an interview with Jones on May 2, Jones told administrators a school counselor asked her to enroll a student in virtual courses in January 2023. Jones then texted Jenkins about the student, and he told her the student should move to virtual programming, according to the report. Virtual data showed the student completed all five of his remaining courses over an eight-day period.

Additionally, administrators asked Jones about virtual data confirming 485 score changes under her account, “many of which were skipped questions until a desired grade student was achieved,” according to the document. Jones reportedly admitted she changed the grades because “[Principal Dan Jenkins] wanted him to be done.” Jones added Jenkins “instructed her to [b]ump the student’s grade, skip questions, skip assignments, and do whatever she had to do to ‘get him out of there.’”

Jones further said Jenkins’ primary motive was to improve the graduation rate. She also said she had been doing this “pretty much the whole time that Dan was principal.”

During the interview, the report says Jones also admitted to placing students in “test-mode only,” meaning students could skip through instructional lessons, materials or assignments. She went on to say those students were ’100 percent’ cheating by simply looking up the answers on their phones.”

When school administrators interviewed Turpin on April 26 and 29, he admitted to changing more than 1,000 grades between January and April 2024 “because he knew others were doing it. When he was asked why he changed the grades, he said, ‘I would say I was told to make sure that kids have a grade above a 60, so I did go in and change their score to make sure it was above a 60.’ He added the counselors told him to change the grades and that it ‘was all from Mr. Jenkins and the counselors.’”

Turpin also told administrators students could complete an entire course in two days while in test-mode only, including one student who completed a geometry course in 1 hour, 46 minutes and 40 seconds, according to the report.

Following Jenkins’ resignation, Clinton High School Assistant Principal Amanda Powers was appointed by Director of Schools Tim Parrott as the school’s Interim Head Principal. Story courtesy of WVLT

Knoxville Remains Identified Almost 2 Years after Being Found

Knoxville Remains Identified Almost 2 Years after Being Found

Knoxville, TN (WOKI) A Knox County cold case is now solved.

Knox County officials have identified a man after his remains were found two years ago.

The Knox County Regional Forensic Center was able to identify the body as 34-year-old Tony Brown. His remains were found behind a home on Knott Avenue in 2022.

No foul play is involved in this case.

Knox County used the help of Othram Labs in Texas which employed ancestry registries and genealogical backgrounds to help identify Brown’s remains.

It’s not the first time law enforcement in East Tennessee or the forensic center has worked with Othram. In December of 2023, the group helped with a case in Roane County.

Four-Day-Old Baby Dies after Dog Bite in Greene County, Sheriff Says

Four-Day-Old Baby Dies after Dog Bite in Greene County, Sheriff Says

Greene County, TN (WOKI) The Greene County Sheriff’s Office is investigating after a four-day-old baby died after being bitten by a dog.

GCSO officials say the baby was bitten by the dog at a Greene County home and taken to Greeneville Community Hospital around 10:30 Monday morning.

The baby was then flown to UT Medical Center and died from its injuries.

The infant has been taken to the Knoxville Regional Forensic Center for an autopsy.

Additional information has not been released.

Tennessee State Parks and TWRA and ACA Teaming Up to Offer Low Cost Kayaking Instruction

Tennessee State Parks and TWRA and ACA Teaming Up to Offer Low Cost Kayaking Instruction

For the third year, Tennessee State Parks and the Tennessee Wildlife Resources Agency (TWRA) are joining the Tennessee chapter of the American Canoe Association (ACA) to offer low-cost kayaking instruction Saturday, May 18.

The event is part of National Safe Boating Week. Last year, the event trained 279 students across North Carolina and Tennessee in 24 simultaneous Kayaking 101 classes led by nationally certified ACA instructor volunteers. The National Safe Boating Council recognized this effort with the Communications Community Impact Award.

As a result of the success realized in Tennessee and North Carolina last year, seven states are participating in the event this year with 43 simultaneous Kayaking 101 classes planned in Tennessee, North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia, Texas, Missouri, and Florida.

“Doubling the number of classes and involving more states for more boaters is great,” said Greer Tidwell, deputy commissioner for the Tennessee Department of Environment and Conservation. “We are happy to host these classes at Tennessee State Parks and grateful to the phenomenal volunteer instructors and our partners at TWRA and the ACA.”  

“We want all Tennesseans to be safe while enjoying the state’s beautiful waterways,” said TWRA Executive Director Jason Maxedon. “We are excited to be part of this great partnership to highlight outdoor recreation opportunities and paddling safety skills.”

“Our instructor volunteers are so excited to share their love of the sport with newcomers and experienced paddlers alike,” said ACA Southeastern Chair Andrea White. “Just one day of training can make the difference between setting yourself up for a bad experience that ruins the sport for you versus setting yourself up for a whole lifetime of paddling fun.” 

Participating Tennessee State Parks for the event are: 

Big Ridge State Park

Booker T. Washington State Park

Cove Lake State Park

David Crockett Birthplace State Park

Harpeth River State Park

Harrison Bay State Park

Hiwassee/Ocoee Scenic River State Park

Long Hunter State Park

Meeman-Shelby Forest State Park

Seven Islands State Birding Park

Warriors’ Path State Park

Classes cost $15 per person including a free kayak rental for training that often costs $75-$150.

All instructors are Tennessee volunteers who are nationally certified to give paddling and rescue training and are supported by experienced safety teams. TWRA wildlife officers will be present at various locations to emphasize and encourage paddlecraft safety on Tennessee waters.

Each park’s event will be limited to 15 people. A limited number of kayaks, paddles, and life jackets will be available. For the second year, the partnership is adding an Adaptive Kayaking 101 event at Booker T. Washington State Park. This event will have specialized adaptive paddling equipment available for paddlers with physical disabilities.

The classes are made available by certified instructor volunteers, safety boaters and equipment donations from many organizations, including Tennessee State Parks. These organizations include: Appalachian Paddling Enthusiasts; Blues City Kayaks; Bluff City Canoe Club; Catalyst Sports; Chattanooga Therapeutic Recreation Services; Chota Canoe Club; East Tennessee Whitewater Club; Knoxville Kayaking Clinic; Nolichucky Outdoor Learning Institute; Sunseeker Outfitters; Team River Runner-Atlanta; Tennessee Scenic Rivers Association; Tennessee Valley Canoe Club; and Tennessee RiverLine.

Interested parties can register at this link. In-person spaces are limited. A free online class is also available; however, in-person training with a certified instructor is strongly encouraged.

More information is available at the American Canoe Association website.

The ACA is the national accrediting body for paddlesports education.

Kayaking at Meeman-Shelby Forest State Park in 2023.

Photo by ANDe Demetriou